5 Fun Egg Hunt Ideas
The boys are totally into egg hunts this year! It seems like we’re doing egg hunts when we
wake up, after dinner and all different times in between. It’s adorable seeing them get excited each
time they find an egg! There are quite a
few ideas out there for how to make egg hunts a little more interesting. Here are my 5 favorites!
1. Glow-In-The Dark
Egg Hunt
I’ve seen this idea all over Pinterest and various
newsletters I subscribe to and it was at the top of my list to try out. Luckily, I have a good friend who was just as
excited about it so we decided to have an egg hunt play date. We gave the boys some cute bunny visors to make them official!
Here’s what you’ll need:
Large plastic eggs
Glow-in-the-dark bracelets
Flashlights
Small treat (candy, small animal figures, etc.)
Simply roll up the bracelets and stuff them in the egg along
with a little treat. You can tape around
the seal to ensure they don’t pop open.
Hide your now glow-in-the-dark eggs, turn off the lights and call in the
kids! The boys used their flashlights to
help them find the eggs. They truly had
so much fun that we had to put the eggs back together and hide them again and
again. The weather was bad for our play
date so we had to have the egg hunt inside, but I think it would be lots of fun
to do it outdoors as well. Best part is
this egg hunt would really appeal to children of all different ages!
2. Puzzle Piece Egg
Hunt
Choose a puzzle that would be of interest to your little one
and appropriate for them to put together.
Place a puzzle piece in each egg and then hide them. Once you’re little one has collected all the
eggs, the fun still isn’t over. Work
together to piece the puzzle together!
3. Easter Egg
Checklist/Scavenger Hunt
Give each child a list of which eggs he/she has to
find. For example: Anthony, find: 2 purple eggs, 1 blue egg, and
3 yellow eggs. This is a great idea if
you’re working on colors and/or counting with your little one.
4. Bunny Money Egg
Hunt
Fill your eggs with “bunny money.” You can use fake money or this free printable:
Bunny Money. Once all the eggs have been collected, have
each child add up their bunny money.
Have little prizes that the children can purchase using their “bunny
money.” This one is especially great for
school aged children working on money skills.
5. Color-Coded Egg
Hunt
Assign each child a specific color to find. I like this idea because it allows all of the
children to get the same amount of eggs, giving equal opportunity to your
younger and older hunters. Of course,
great for practicing colors as well!
Egg hunts in general have many embedded language skills –
SPATIAL CONCEPTS (where the eggs are hidden), DESCRIPTIVE CONCEPTS (color, design,
and size of the eggs), and MATH CONCEPTS (how many and how much) to name a few,
but what I think is most significant about eggs hunts is the EXPERIENCE you
create with your little one. SHARED EXPERIENCES
give you and your little one SOMETHING to TALK ABOUT, SOMETHING to REMEMBER, SOMETHING
to RELATE and COMPARE to other things and provide your little one with PRIOR
KNOWLEDGE for FUTURE EXPERIENCES. There’s
no greater way to ENCOURAGE LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT than that!
Before I sign off, I can't resist showing a few pictures of my littlest bunny with our plastic Easter eggs that we got TONS of use out of!
Happy Hunting Everyone!
And if you’re in need of a few more Easter activities, make
sure you check these out:
Love & Language,
Marisa
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